United States Court of Appeals For The Ninth Circuit
United States Court of Appeals For The Ninth Circuit
15233
LAHOTI v. VERICHECK, INC 15237
COUNSEL
OPINION
This case does not reflect the first time Lahoti has regis-
tered domain names that were similar to the names or trade-
marks of other companies.2 Lahoti had previously registered
more than four hundred domain names containing the trade-
marks of other companies, including nissan.org, 1800mat-
2
Lahoti’s past condemnation as a cybersquatter has no bearing on the
classification of Vericheck’s Disputed Mark as suggestive, and thereby
distinctive, or merely descriptive, and thereby not entitled to trademark
protection. As one example, the text of the ACPA states that a cybersquat-
ter is liable if he or she uses a domain name that “in the case of a mark
that is distinctive at the time of registration of the domain name, is identi-
cal or confusingly similar to that mark.” 15 U.S.C. § 1125(d)(1)(A)
(emphasis added). Similarly, the distinctiveness of the Disputed Mark is
a prerequisite to claims of trademark infringement under federal and state
law trademark claims. See generally 2 McCarthy on Trademarks and
Unfair Competition § 11:2 (4th ed.).
However, we would be remiss if we did not note Lahoti’s cybersquat-
ting activities, because they are relevant under the ACPA to whether a per-
son acted in bad faith. See 15 U.S.C. § 1125(d)(1)(B)(i)(VIII) (providing
that in evaluating bad faith under the ACPA, courts should consider “the
person’s registration or acquisition of multiple domain names which the
person knows are identical or confusingly similar to marks of others that
are distinctive”).
LAHOTI v. VERICHECK, INC 15241
tress.com, and ebays.com. In at least two cases, the United
Nations World Intellectual Property Organization ordered
Lahoti to give up control of some of his domain names
because they infringed on a trademark. In 2000 the United
States District Court for the Central District of California in
E-Stamp Corp. v. Lahoti (the “E-Stamp Case”), No. CV-99-
9287, concluded that Lahoti was a “cybersquatter” and that
his registration, attempted sale, and use of the estamps.com
domain name violated federal trademark law and the ACPA.
II
III
But after taking note of the general rule of law that a mark
is suggestive if it takes imagination or a mental leap to iden-
tify the referenced product, and applicable guiding principles,
a trier of fact is still left with a hard task of judgment. Where
does “VeriCheck” fall in the continuum between marks that
are plainly suggestive, and therefore distinctive, and those that
are plainly distinctive? As the reviewing court, our role is lim-
ited to determining whether the district court clearly erred in
deciding that the Disputed Mark was suggestive in the context
of Vericheck’s financial transaction processing services,
which include check verification services.
[8] The PTO Appeal Board has cautioned that a third party
registration is not “determinative” of distinctiveness if cir-
cumstances have materially changed since the third-party reg-
istration or if the registration is distinguishable because it
combines one part of the disputed mark in that case with non-
descriptive terms. See In re Sun Microsystems, Inc., 59
U.S.P.Q.2d 1084, 1087-88 (TTAB 2001) (holding that third
party registrations of marks containing “beans” are not evi-
dence that “Agentbeans” was distinctive for software written
in the Java computer programming language because other
registrations “combine[d] ‘beans’ with what appear to be non-
descriptive terms,” and because “beans” had recently become
a popular term for a form of Java code). Here, by contrast, the
Arizona Mark and Disputed Mark are not just similar but are
identical in text, and both were registered for use with “check
verification services.” More importantly, the parties did not
present any evidence with regard to whether technological
changes impact whether the term “Vericheck” should be con-
sidered to describe or rather only to suggest “check verifica-
tion.” We conclude that the federal registration of the Arizona
Mark shows that the PTO thought “Vericheck” was distinc-
tive and not descriptive of “check verification services.”7 The
7
Lahoti argues that the federal registration of the Arizona Mark is
instead evidence that the Disputed Mark was not distinctive in 2003, when
Lahoti registered the Domain Name, because the Arizona company then
had the exclusive right to use the mark and, according to Lahoti, only one
of the two marks could be distinctive because they described similar ser-
LAHOTI v. VERICHECK, INC 15251
district court’s decision to rely on the third party PTO regis-
tration of the Arizona Mark for evidence that the Disputed
Mark is distinctive was legally proper and not clearly errone-
ous.
[9] Nonetheless, the district court based its decision that the
Disputed Mark was distinctive in part on reasoning that is
contrary to federal trademark law. Context is critical to a dis-
tinctiveness analysis. Whether a mark is suggestive or
descriptive “can be determined only by reference to the goods
or services that it identifies.” Rodeo Collection, Ltd. v. W.
Seventh, 812 F.2d 1215, 1218 (9th Cir. 1987); see also 2
McCarthy on Trademarks 11:64 (“[T]he mark BRILLIANT
may be ‘descriptive’ on diamonds, ‘suggestive’ on furniture
polish, and ‘arbitrary’ on canned applesauce.”). A related
principle is that a mark “need not recite each feature of the
relevant goods or services in detail to be descriptive.” In re
Dial-A-Mattress Operating Corp., 240 F.3d 1341, 1346 (Fed.
Cir. 2001).
[10] The district court erred to the extent it required that the
Disputed Mark describe all of Vericheck’s services to qualify
as “descriptive.” The district court reasoned that the Disputed
Mark does not “immediately call to mind the broad array of
electronic transaction processing services that Vericheck pro-
vides.” However, a mark does not have to meet this require-
ment to be found descriptive. The inquiry is “whether, when
the mark is seen on the goods or services, it immediately con-
veys information about their nature.” In re Patent & Trade-
mark Servs. Inc, 49 U.S.P.Q.2d 1537, 1539 (T.T.A.B. 1998).
IV